Cooperation in regular lattices
Lucas S. Flores, Marco A. Amaral, Mendeli H. Vainstein, Heitor C. M., Fernandes

TL;DR
This paper investigates how different regular lattice topologies influence cooperation in public goods and Prisoner's Dilemma games, revealing that increased connectivity and clustered structures generally promote cooperation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of cooperation dynamics across various regular lattices and introduces a reinterpretation of the Public Goods Game as a focal game with weighted neighborhoods.
Findings
Higher number of neighbors enhances cooperation when normalized by payoff factors.
Clustered topologies benefit cooperation in FPGG but not always in PGG.
PD and FPGG can be mapped under certain payoff parametrizations, showing their similarities.
Abstract
In the context of Evolutionary Game Theory, one of the most noteworthy mechanisms to support cooperation is spatial reciprocity, usually accomplished by distributing players in a spatial structure allowing cooperators to cluster together and avoid exploitation. This raises an important question: how is the survival of cooperation affected by different topologies? Here, to address this question, we explore the Focal Public Goods (FPGG) and classic Public Goods Games (PGG), and the Prisoner's Dilemma (PD) on several regular lattices: honeycomb, square (with von Neumann and Moore neighborhoods), kagome, triangular, cubic, and 4D hypercubic lattices using both analytical methods and agent-based Monte Carlo simulations. We found that for both Public Goods Games, a consistent trend appears on all two-dimensional lattices: as the number of first neighbors increases, cooperation is enhanced.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
